Language

         

 Advertising byAdpathway

Ryan McMahon’s walk-off hit in 11th inning gives Yankees crazy win over Rays

18 hours ago 5

PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway

On Tuesday night, Cody Bellinger gave the Yankees life. A day later, he repeated the feat.

With Aaron Judge sidelined, there’s no debating the Yankees most valuable position player.

Bellinger’s RBI triple pulled them even in the 10th, and Ryan McMahon’s fly ball single sent the Yankees to a dramatic 5-4 win over the Rays in The Bronx.

These past two wins over the floundering Rays have not come easy.

The Yankees had to rally from three runs down Tuesday, and they managed just two hits over the first seven innings Wednesday.

But clutch hits by Bellinger and Anthony Volpe — his ninth-inning homer forced extra innings — along with a strong start by Will Warren were enough Wednesday.

Tim Hill worked a scoreless 11th for the victory.

Devin Williams blew a one-run lead in the top of the ninth, allowing a two-run Josh Lowe homer for his first blown save since April 25.

A smiling Ryan McMahon (left) is mobbed by teammates after hitting the game-winning single in the 11th inning of the Yankees’ 5-4 win over the Rays on Jan. 30, 2025. Robert Sabo / New York Post

The Yankees nearly had a chance to win it in the bottom of the inning after Volpe’s homer.

Austin Wells singled and Trent Grisham nearly beat out a bunt.

Wells, however, didn’t realize Grisham was just the second out of the inning and was tagged out coming off the field in a stunning moment.

Ryan McMahon watches his game-winning single in the 11th inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays. Robert Sabo / New York Post

In the 10th, Luke Weaver allowed the automatic runner to score on a Jonathan Aranda sacrifice fly. Bellinger answered with a one-out, run-scoring triple, but he was left stranded by Giancarlo Stanton and Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Over the span of the first seven innings, the Yankees managed just two hits. Across 14 pitches in the eighth, they doubled that number.

Cody Bellinger hits an RBI triple in the 10th inning of the Yankees-Rays game. AP
Austin Wells gets thrown out in a rundown in the ninth inning after mistakenly already thinking there were three outs. Robert Sabo / New York Post

Grisham homered leading off the frame, and Stanton plated Ben Rice with the go-ahead run in the rally off Rays reliever Bryan Baker.

Warren received a hard-luck no decision after delivering six innings of one-run ball.

The Rays struck first in the third, when Lowe plated Taylor Walls with a two-out, run-scoring double.

Anthony Volpe hits a solo home run in the 11th inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays. Jason Szenes / New York Post

That was all Warren allowed.

The young right-hander, who had struggled of late with a 6.29 ERA in five July starts, made it through six innings for the first time since June 22.

He allowed six hits, struck out four and walked only one while tying his season high with 102 pitches.

Josh Lowe celebrates with teammates after hitting a two-run homer in the ninth inning of the Yankees-Rays game. Jason Szenes / New York Post

Warren received help from his defense.

Junior Caminero was picked off second base in the second, and Aranda was caught stealing in the fourth.

Giancarlo Stanton hits an RBI single in the eighth inning of the Yankees’ win over the Rays. AP

That loomed large in the frame, as Warren walked Lowe and allowed a single to Jake Magnum with two outs. He escaped further trouble by retiring Matt Thaiss on a weak groundout.

The bigger issue was the Yankees were doing nothing against Rays starter Zack Littell.

Yankees starter Will Warren, who received a no-decision, held the Rays to one run over six innings. Jason Szenes / New York Post

They managed just two hits — a McMahon double and Chisholm single — in five innings against the right-hander.

Their best chance came in the second, after consecutive walks to Grisham and Rice loaded the bases. But Bellinger, Tuesday night’s hero, grounded out to end the threat.

Go beyond the box score with the Bombers

Sign up for Inside the Yankees by Greg Joyce, exclusively on Sports+.

Thank you

Finally, in the eighth, the bats woke up.

First, Grisham. Then, others followed.

Rice singled, then advanced to third on a Bellinger single and scored on Stanton’s single.

Read Entire Article

         

        

HOW TO FIGHT BACK WITH THE 5G  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway